Friday, January 4, 2013

Bob Dylan 51: Tempest

This late into his career, it’s a big deal indeed when a new Dylan album comes out. Still performing at the age of 71, every moment he’s still around is precious, and like some of his contemporaries, he foregoes the nostalgia route by occasionally adding to the catalog. Tempest isn’t as rife with heavy symbolism as some would hope, unless the rarity of Dylan giving an album a title track is supposed to mean something. It also shouldn’t be significant that the album was released 11 years to the day after “Love And Theft”, and 22 years from Under The Red Sky, but it is, even if we don’t know why. As he’d insist, it’s just a collection of songs.
“Duquesne Whistle” begins with a sound one would associate with a grainy cartoon or Chaplin short; once the song kicks in it gains a little more fuzz, with a jaunty organ part underneath. Robert Hunter, who’d supplied most of the lyrics for Together Through Life, does the same here; the rest is all Bob, or at least until somebody points out all the literary lifts. Meanwhile, good luck trying to get the image of that pinhead from the video out of your skull. “Soon After Midnight” lopes along nicely, along the lines of “Where Teardrops Fall” from Oh Mercy. While sadly not a cover of the David Gilmour song from Ummagumma, “Narrow Way” pounds its groove for several minutes. “Long And Wasted Years” sounds like a Lanois production in the intro, and something about the descending guitar brings to mind George Harrison’s solo stuff. His delivery, a cross between the shouted style of the ‘80s and the aw-shucks voice of the Basement Tapes, is enticing. With its toe-tapping arrangement, “Pay In Blood” might be the most commercial-sounding tune he’s done in 30 years. Its upbeat presentation becomes even weirder considering the content of the song. “Scarlet Town” is a little too closely related to “Ain’t Talkin’”, another song everybody likes but us, but at least it tries to tell a tale.
“Early Roman Kings” was the first song previewed from the album, and starts out sounding too much like “My Wife’s Home Town”—almost like he wanted to scare people into thinking the album would be Together Through Life Part 2. The idea of “early Roman kings in their sharkskin suits” is an interesting juxtaposition, and that’s just the beginning; the accordion is completely unnecessary and wheezes from top to toe. At nearly nine minutes and one chord, “Tin Angel” threatens to bore, but the story (something of an update of “Matty Groves”) is told well, with lots of twists. If that’s not long enough, the title track runs nearly fourteen minutes, a melodic rumination on the sinking of the Titanic, which seems to wander between actual accounts and red-herring references to the movie (fitting, since it’s in the same mood as “Red River Shore”, or another one of his movie songs we never bothered to memorize). The final epic is “Roll On John”, a tribute to John Lennon that gently tugs heartstrings. There’s a little slap-back Plastic Ono-style echo on the vocal, and the whole thing sounds very much like a big ship bobbing on the waves. It’s not the most complicated song, and many of the images don’t necessarily apply to the Beatle, but it’s the type of thing that will stick in your brain long after the disc has faded to silence.Tempest is good, but not great, and that’s fine. It’s certainly an improvement on his last two regular albums, even Modern Times, a case where the ingredients were there but the recipe wasn’t accurate. He’s not all rasp, either—when he sings without pushing, he’s still incredibly smooth. We may elevate this to four stars eventually, but for now, we can strongly recommend it.

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